蜜桃视频app

What DC can learn from the 1918 flu epidemic

In this November 1918 photo made available by the Library of Congress, a nurse takes the pulse of a patient in the influenza ward of the Walter Reed hospital in Washington. (Harris & Ewing/Library of Congress via AP, File)

Ever since the novel coronavirus began infecting millions globally and having an unavoidable impact on American life, a lot of people have been reminded about a public health crisis from more than a century ago.

In 1918, World War I was coming to an end at an estimated cost of 15 million to 19 million lives. It seemed like an unfathomable number, but an even larger death toll was in store: An influenza epidemic that ended up killing about 50 million people worldwide, including about 675,000 Americans, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

That included nearly 3,000 people in Washington, D.C., between October 1918 and February 1919. Given the District鈥檚 population at the time, that worked out to an excess death rate of 608 people per 100,000, one of the highest in the country.

Looking over the history of the earlier pandemic, it鈥檚 hard to escape the conclusion that while a lot of things have changed since then, a lot of the factors at work more than a century ago 鈥 mixed acceptance of social distancing, a varied approach to shutdowns 鈥 are affecting decisions being made now.

This report relies on the Influenza Encyclopedia, compiled by University of Michigan professor Howard Markel, and reports from The Washington Evening Star as the epidemic was happening.

鈥楾here should be no public alarm鈥

On Sept. 21, 1918, The Washington Evening Star reported the District鈥檚 first case of, and first death from, what it that day called 鈥渢he Spanish influenza鈥 鈥 named for the disease’s then-suspected origins, though the latest thinking is the pathogen started among U.S. soldiers in Kansas who then deployed abroad.

John W. Clore, of Florida Avenue, was 30 years old. While the influenza, like COVID-19, mostly killed older people, a surprising number of those who lost their lives in the 1918 epidemic were relatively young.

The newspaper repeated 鈥渢he presumption of the health department鈥 that Clore had gotten sick in New York, and that he had been stricken and diagnosed and had died in the course of a few hours. Health Officer Dr. William C. Fowler told the Evening Star, 鈥淚f there are any other cases, they have not been reported to my office.鈥

That didn鈥檛 last long. The newspaper also listed on the next page the number of American soldiers and Marines killed in the war, which passed 35,000. Soon, the relative death tolls would change places.

The next day in the Star, Surgeon General of the Army, William C. Gorgas, published 12 rules for staying safe from influenza. Some of them remain solid advice today, such as avoiding crowds, washing your hands regularly and covering your coughs and sneezes.

Others 鈥 chewing your food well, drinking a glass of water when you wake up, breathing deeply, avoiding tight clothes and keeping the windows open 鈥 not so much.

The editorial board said, 鈥淭here should be no public alarm over the situation. 鈥 Agitation invites it. Fresh air fights it. Common sense will aid in its defeat.鈥 Fowler later that month said, 鈥淭here is little danger that Washington, with its high degree of wholesomeness, will be the scene of serious outbreak of the disease.鈥

Wholesomeness wasn鈥檛 enough. It didn鈥檛 take long before D.C. instituted the kind of social distancing guidelines that the city lives under today. While Fowler and other officials resisted the idea for a few days, instead advising people to stay off streetcars and away from each other as best they could, by the time the month was over nine days later, 37 people in the District had died of the virus.

On Oct. 2, D.C.鈥檚 schools were closed. The next day, Louis Brownlow, one of the three federally-appointed commissioners of D.C., canceled all public gatherings, closing churches, movie houses and theaters.

Businesses remained open, but hours were staggered so as not to overload the public spaces or public transportation.

By then, however, the “influenza,” as it was commonly called, was on the loose.

鈥楢 terrible outbreak鈥

Marian Moser Jones, a public health historian and a professor at the University of Maryland School of Public Health, told 蜜桃视频app, 鈥淭hey waited until it was almost at its peak mortality 鈥 and there was a terrible outbreak in Washington, D.C.鈥

By the time October 1918 was over, 1,471 people in D.C. had died of the influenza, according to Fowler鈥檚 year-end report to the commissioners.

Segregation was a hallmark of the District at the time 鈥 on Oct. 21, the Evening Star reported that 鈥淎 new relief station for colored people, separate from the whites, has been organized鈥 at the Armstrong Manual Training School, on P Street NW between 2nd and 3rd streets.

It is not explicitly said that previous hospitals were white-only, but virtually every other segment of D.C. life was segregated at the time.

The health disparities D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser talks about today were in evidence then, too 鈥 by the time the year was out, the death rate from the influenza was 9.2% for 鈥渃olored鈥 people (the terminology used in Fowler鈥檚 report), 6.1% for white people.

Chafing at restrictions

Even as the deaths were rising, people were unhappy about the restrictions. Moser said, 鈥淭here was public pressure to reopen public institutions 鈥 and they gave in.鈥

In October, a pastor unhappy about the closure of churches wrote to the Evening Star saying that panic, 鈥渢he most powerful ally of the disease,鈥 was being aided by 鈥渢he fact that the normal religious life of our city has been disorganized.鈥

Moser said the current situation gives her a new perspective on the complaints of the past.

鈥淲hen I read about this, I see how much pressure the public officials must have been under 鈥 just to allow life to resume as normal,鈥 she said.

鈥淣ow that we鈥檙e in the middle of this, I can understand why they were under such pressure,鈥 she added. 鈥淲hereas before, when I was reading about this, I thought 鈥楾hey were crazy! There was a flu pandemic!鈥 鈥 And now we can understand, because we鈥檙e weary of all of these restrictions on our life, and we want things to back to the way they were.鈥

and has written three books on D.C. history, said the resistance to social distancing measures wasn鈥檛 rooted in lack of knowledge or selfishness.

For one thing, it was the nation鈥檚 capital and there was a war on. For another, this was a very different city, in a time before working from home and grocery delivery existed.


You really didn’t have a lot of isolation at that point.

Local historian Matthew Gilmore


鈥淭he population was much more crowded together,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou didn’t have a lot of Northwest Washington developed, where you now see lots of single-family homes and even the large apartment buildings 鈥 those did not exist at the time. The close-in, downtown Washington was heavily populated.鈥

鈥淪o the restriction on going to the theater and going to church 鈥 is that going to have much of a social distancing effect when people are living in close proximity? You really didn’t have a lot of isolation at that point.鈥

As we know now from COVID-19, cases, hospitalizations and deaths lag behind the public-health measures that officials take.

On Oct. 21, the Evening Star reported that 61 D.C. residents had died in the preceding 24 hours, down five from the previous day and a total 鈥渇alling off鈥 of 48 deaths in the previous 72 hours and of 692 cases over the previous 48 hours. Health authorities had 鈥渂uoyant hopes that the worst is over.鈥

Relatively, yes. The worst day for deaths in D.C. was Oct. 12, 1918, with a total of 92 deaths; by Oct. 31, that was down to nine, and on Nov. 4, the day the restrictions were lifted, the District had 16 cases and 11 deaths.

By Dec. 2, D.C. had gone four days without an influenza death. Health officials said the flu would continue in some form throughout the winter, but that the worst had passed. Fowler said that he expected an uptick in cases during cold, rainy weather, while many doctors thought rain washed the virus away.

It did, but in the wake of the relaxing of closures and other public health restrictions, influenza deaths jumped from 131 in November to 327 in December, Fowler鈥檚 report found.

Still, it wasn鈥檛 considered serious enough to reclose schools, churches and the like. In mid-December, Commissioner William Gwynn Gardiner said that deaths from all causes in D.C. totaled 260 between Dec. 1 and 12, compared with 229 for the same period a year before. Another 263 people died in the District of influenza in the first half of 1919.

In all, nearly 3,000 people in D.C. died of the influenza, out of a total population of nearly 400,000. And while, as now, older people were prime targets for the disease 鈥 33% of the deaths happened to patients over 70, according to Fowler鈥檚 numbers 鈥 but 25.3% were under age 4 and 7.3% were in their 20s.

A fading story

Somehow, as 1918 turned to 1919, not only the influenza but the memory of the epidemic was fading.

By Jan. 1, the influenza epidemic occupied the 16th subsection of the Star鈥檚 story of 1918 in review 鈥 perhaps understandably rather lower than the end of the war, but only one item above the appointment of the District鈥檚 鈥渇irst woman traffic policeman.鈥 It was still on people鈥檚 minds somewhat, but most of the mentions of influenza in the Evening Star were in advertisements for supposed cures such as 鈥 um, laxatives.

Brownlow gave his impression of the influenza outbreak in his autobiography, Gilmore said, but 鈥淚t doesn’t even have its own separate chapter鈥 in the two-volume work.


People 100 years ago weren鈥檛 too different than people now.

Marian Moser Jones, University of Maryland


Gilmore said there were several reasons for the passing of the epidemic from people鈥檚 memories, one of which was a common feature in the District.

鈥淎 lot of these people came from elsewhere,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o if your sister moved to Washington as a war worker, and then either suffered influenza or died from it, how much of a Washington, D.C., story is it? How much is it a story which belongs to the family?鈥

He also said, simply, 鈥淚t was also probably something that people didn’t want to remember.鈥

Moser said it鈥檚 important to remember the influenza epidemic as the District and the D.C. area tackle COVID-19 鈥 especially the effects of the regulations.

鈥淧eople 100 years ago weren鈥檛 too different than people now,鈥 Moser said. 鈥淭hey were highly social; it was modern American cities with public transport and people going shopping and going to weddings and political rallies 鈥 it was an election year 鈥 people wanted to get back to life as usual.鈥

鈥淭he pressures are similar, and the reaction in terms of viral transmission is probably going to be similar,鈥 she added. 鈥淎nd I think that鈥檚 something we can really learn from this [earlier] pandemic, and hopefully mount a sustained response.鈥

蜜桃视频app鈥檚 Valerie Bonk contributed to this report.

Rick Massimo

Rick Massimo came to 蜜桃视频app, and to Washington, in 2013 after having lived in Providence, R.I., since he was a child.聽He's the author of "A Walking Tour of the Georgetown Set" and "I Got a Song: A History of the Newport Folk Festival."

Federal News Network Logo
Log in to your 蜜桃视频app account for notifications and alerts customized for you.